The Arizona Diamondbacks have contacted Major League Baseball about an Associated Press reporter who discovered their advance scouting report on the New York Yankees in the dugout yesterday and put its contents on the wire. "I am furious," one Diamondbacks executive said. "That is theft." Said GM Josh Byrnes: "It's disappointing, the inclination to print it rather than return it. But, it is what it is."
http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/blog/mlb_experts/post/Five-and-Fly-Change-for-a-few-Bucs?urn=mlb,36667

When I was on the Blue Jays beat, during a swing through Minnesota, I walked into the Twins locker room and taped on the wall -- in an area where the press was allowed -- was a scouting report on Kelvim Escobar, that night's starting pitcher for the Jays.

I took down all the information and used it heavily for my game story, because, as it happens, the scouting report was bang on, particularly about Escobar's failings. (He lost that night.)

No one said anything about it. But what could they say? If you don't want reporters reading it, put it up in the trainer's room -- or take it down before we can go into the locker room.

If Ben Walker found it lying open in the dugout, or if it was just a sheet of paper sitting there, and he copied down the information and relayed it to his readers -- I don't see anything wrong with that. He's allowed to be there. Someone with Arizona should have been more careful.

Now, if he opened a book that was closed, or if he took it back up to the press box with him, that's a no-no, I'd say. I'm only thinking that's a possibility because of the "theft" line.

Without knowing the circumstances, it's hard to judge.

But again, if it was there for all to see, fair game, I'd say. (And I've done, too.)

Work at an AZ paper out of the Phoenix area, saw it on the wire and ran it as a breakout with the gamer.
I thought it was interetsing the AP sent it across, but also found it an interesting read.
Anyway, if Walker saw the report and copied it down he's fine. If he took the report from the dugout or clubhouse, even if the game was long over, that's wrong.

The information contained in the scouting report is basically someone's intellectual property. In that context, I don't think it makes a difference if you copy down the information or take it with you.

Let's say Ben Walker is working on a big expose. The notebook with all his research falls out of his pocket and gets left behind in the press box. OK, Ben should have been more careful. But does a competing news organization now have the right (legal? ethical?) to publish all the information in that notebook?

My guess is Terry Taylor would be screaming much louder than the Diamondbacks are right now.

There is just pure speculation on what actually happened. A lot of what-ifs. I'm very confident the story/scouting report wasn't placed on the wire without going through a stringent vetting process within AP.

Work at an AZ paper out of the Phoenix area, saw it on the wire and ran it as a breakout with the gamer.
I thought it was interetsing the AP sent it across, but also found it an interesting read.
Anyway, if Walker saw the report and copied it down he's fine. If he took the report from the dugout or clubhouse, even if the game was long over, that's wrong.

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Nah.

He found it on the floor of the dugout, abandoned there for the custodian. There's a principle in our laws that essentially says anything abandoned as trash is free for the taking, which I believe applies in this case.

Hey, D-Backs --- don't want somebody reading your stuff? Fine. Take care of it or run it through a shredder. Mr. Walker gave you nothing to whine about.